Anyone who thinks children's media is merely innocent fluff and free of fascist agendas must've missed the 20th century.
But snarky one-liners are easier than research.
Hey, fuck the children of poor people if they can't take a joke, right?
Psyops for
kidz is not just done by CIA-Disney.
http://www.cjr.org/resources/index.php?c=viacom
Viacom owns Nickolodeon's Dora and Diego.
Viacom owns lots of youth-oriented media loaded with psyops.
Viacom also owns:
> CIA-CBS, MTV (which partners with the Army for recruting)
> CIA-Paramount Pictures (where the 1953 CIA mole's letters to hq were from)
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewtopic.php?t=18523
> Steven CIA Spielberg's Dreamworks.[/b]
Socializing Latin American
kidz for recruitment became critical when recruiting of African Americans plummeted after 2000.
Look at the printed booklets, not just the videos. I did.
They are used as news cycle bandaid psyops the same way Disney used Little Golden Books because they are short and easy to generate quickly.
The Dora "Mariana the mermaid" character appeared in 2007 when Republican Jack Abramoff and Tom Delay's history with
child slave labor in the US's Mariana Islands resurfaced.
Not good for recruiting Freedom Rescuers, is it?.
There are 20-something printed booklet stories of Dora that have similar counterpropaganda decoys mixed in with the mil-intel pre-training memes.
Parents get a dose along with the kidz, too.
Disney's 'Little Einsteins' has the same
LEO (law enforcement officer) memes.
Y'see,
"Leo," the male leader (of course), can...
conduct cattle with his BATON.
ouch ouch I thought this was a free speech zone ouch ouch ouch
Published on
9/11 2007,
'The Firebird,' reinforcing the cover story 'collapse from fire' of the World Trade Center
by juxtaposing the memes
"fire" and "flying"-
All examples of exploiting
source amnesia by injecting keywords and memes into developing minds to influence memory recall and emotions.
Because...
recall and emotion are chemically interactive.
See
'somatic markers, priming, implicit memory'